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Is Florida’s Humidity Making Your Home Feel Clammy? Your AC Might Be Too Big

Cool But Sticky? That’s Not Normal

The thermostat reads 72°F. The AC has been running all day. But you walk inside and the air still feels heavy, sticky, like the humidity followed you in from outside. Nothing is technically wrong. The system is running. The house is cool. And yet it does not feel that way.

The Disconnect Between Temperature and Comfort

What your thermostat says vs. what your home actually feels like

🌡️
Thermostat Reading
72°F

Cool

💧
How It Actually Feels
Clammy

Heavy & Sticky

This is one of the more frustrating problems South Florida homeowners run into, and most never trace it back to the real cause. The air conditioner is not failing. In many cases, it is oversized for the home it is cooling, and that mismatch is what is making everything feel damp.

Your AC Is Doing More Than Just Cooling the Air

Most people think of their AC as a cooling machine. Temperature goes up, system kicks on, temperature comes back down. But there is a second function running in the background that matters as much in a humid climate: dehumidification.

As warm indoor air passes over the cold evaporator coil inside your system, moisture condenses on the surface and drains out of the home. Think of a cold glass of water sweating on a table in August. That same principle is what your AC uses to pull humidity out of the air.

The catch is that it takes time. The coil needs a sustained, uninterrupted run cycle to pull a meaningful amount of moisture from the air. Cut the cycle short, and the humidity stays.

Short-Cycling Is the Real Problem

And most homeowners have never heard of it

An oversized AC unit cools your home so aggressively that it hits the thermostat’s target temperature within minutes. Then it shuts off. The temperature drifts back up, the system kicks on again, hits its target, shuts off again. This pattern is called short-cycling, and it is the main reason a home can feel cool and clammy at the same time.

Proper Cycle

Long, steady run: Removes humidity effectively

Efficient operation, lower bills, comfortable air

Short-Cycling

Frequent on/off bursts: No time to dehumidify

High stress on equipment, sticky air, higher costs

What Short-Cycling Does to a Home Over Time

The humidity problem is the most obvious symptom, but it is not the only one. A system that short-cycles never settles into an efficient rhythm. The compressor and fan motor absorb the stress of those constant starts and stops, wearing down faster than they should.

Energy consumption goes up because repeated startups draw more power than a system holding a steady pace. Over a South Florida cooling season that stretches eight to ten months, that adds up in ways that show up clearly on your utility bill.

Signs Your Air Conditioner Is Oversized for the Space

Most homeowners assume these symptoms point to a broken unit or low refrigerant. Oversizing rarely comes to mind. Here are the signs worth paying attention to:

The air inside feels damp or clammy even when the temperature is where you set it
The system runs in short bursts, cycling on and off every few minutes
Moisture collects on windows or glass surfaces indoors
A musty or stale smell lingers, especially in rooms that stay closed
Some areas of the home cool down fast while others barely change

A musty smell in particular is worth taking seriously. Persistent indoor humidity creates conditions where mold and mildew grow, and that becomes a health issue, not a comfort one.

Why Florida Homes End Up With the Wrong AC Size

Square footage is not enough information to size an air conditioner. It is a rough starting point, but it leaves out most of what actually determines how much cooling a home needs.

What a Manual J Load Calculation Actually Looks At?

Sizing an AC system correctly requires more than measuring square footage. The industry standard is a Manual J load calculation, which factors in all of these variables:

📏
Ceiling Height
🏠
Insulation Quality
🪟
Window Size & Orientation
☀️
Sun Exposure
👥
Occupancy Levels
🔥
Heat from Appliances

Two homes with identical floor plans can have very different cooling needs depending on these variables. In South Florida, many AC replacements skip this step entirely. A technician estimates based on square footage, installs what seems right, and the homeowner ends up with the exact problem described here.

Square footage is only one variable, and in local climate, the cooling system options available for different home configurations each respond to heat and humidity differently.

What Homeowners Can Do About It

Explore your options based on your situation

Full Replacement
Mini-Split Addition
Whole-Home Dehumidifier

The Permanent Solution: Properly Sized Replacement

The most permanent solution is replacing the oversized unit with one sized correctly for the home. That means starting with a Manual J load calculation and working from there, not from an estimate.

Benefits:
  • Eliminates humidity and short-cycling problems permanently
  • Lower energy bills from proper operation
  • Extended equipment lifespan
  • Consistent comfort throughout the home

Zone-Specific Solution: Ductless Mini-Split

For homes with specific problem areas — rooms that always feel warmer or damper than the rest of the house — a ductless mini-split for rooms and additions without existing ductwork can handle those zones independently.

Each unit controls its own area, so the central system is not being asked to compensate for a space it was never designed to condition well.

Best For:
  • Problem rooms that never match the rest of the house
  • Home additions without ductwork
  • Sunrooms and converted garages
  • Independent zone control without replacing central system

Interim Solution: Whole-Home Dehumidifier

If replacing the system is not on the table right now, a whole-home dehumidifier can work alongside your existing equipment to actively remove moisture from the air. It does not solve the sizing mismatch, but it meaningfully improves how the home feels while a longer-term plan comes together.

Important Note:

Keeping up with routine AC maintenance in South Florida’s humid climate also puts a technician in a position to catch early signs of short-cycling and flag sizing concerns before they become bigger problems.

How Oversized AC Systems Drive Up Energy Costs in Florida

Running an air conditioner for eight to ten months a year is already a significant energy commitment. An oversized unit that short-cycles makes it worse, because repeated startups consume more electricity than a system holding a steady pace.

The inefficiency compounds over an entire season and shows up in ways that are easy to miss month to month but add up significantly over a year. The answer is not a bigger system or a newer version of the same mismatch. It is a system sized to the actual demands of the home, running the kind of consistent cycles that cool the air and pull the moisture out of it at the same time.

Bigger Equipment Does Not Mean Better Comfort in a Humid Climate

This is worth saying plainly because it goes against the instinct most homeowners bring to AC shopping. A more powerful unit does not perform better in Florida. It performs worse, because it never runs long enough to do the part of the job that matters most here.

The homes that stay comfortable through South Florida summers are not the ones with the largest systems. They are the ones with systems matched carefully to the actual demands of the space. Getting that right from the start, or correcting it when something has gone wrong, is what makes the difference between a house that reads cool on a thermostat and one that actually feels comfortable to live in.

Fix Your Humidity Problem the Right Way

If your home feels sticky even with the AC running, we can help. Our team performs proper Manual J load calculations and recommends systems sized to your specific home — not just your square footage.